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Chicago examiner wednesday wednesday v Chicago may 29 1912 16 pages vol x no 137 a m rockefeller on stand in oil case loses memory adroitly avoids direct replies to unt.rmyer and admits only same group still di rects policies of standard richest man in world brown and freckled and in pink neglige shirt pounds table never read trust decision hew tork may 28 john d rocke feller was subjected to a gruelling exam ination to-day by samuel l'ntermyer in the proceedings instituted ln missouri by the waters-pierce oil company to prevent that former subsidiary of the standard oil trnst from falling again into the con trol of the rockefeller interests the examination was conducted before special commissioner a l jacobs ap pointed by the missouri court to take tes imony in the legal resistance h clay pierce president of the waters-pierce company is making against the continued domination of the company by the masters of the old oil trust which is supposed to have been dissolved by the decree of the united states supreme court low witness was attired for two hours mr rockefeller was ln the witness chair brown as a nut and freckled as a turkey egg the world's rich est man stood the ordeal without apparent fatigue pain or embarrassment he was attired in a natty gray tweed suit the frock coat of which was cut ln the latest ashlon he wore a negligee madras shirt jf a delicate pink tint and with detachable cuffs that frequently caught the sleeves f his coat and protruded their upper edges a white silk four-in-hand tie nold njr a brilliant emerald stickpin completed ms attire mr rockefeller proved a hand task for the adroit and skillful mr untermyer the lawyer could have finished with the witness in a few minutes bad mr rocke feller not artfully and persistently avoided giving direct answers to simple questions at the conclusion of the examination mr untermyer declared that he had flnal j achieved what he bad started out to do this was the obtaining of the admission from mr rockefeller tbat a group of gentlemen are still directing the policies of standard oil from the same old stand at 26 broadway mr rockefeller's persons counsel george sothern and marlowe to retire from stage in 1 9 1 4 shakespearean stars announce they will close careers after two more seasons cleveland 0 may 28 e h sothern and julia marlowe announced to-duy that after two more seasons they will retire permanently from the stage for some time it has been their purpose to set a final limit to their dramatic activities next season they will make their final appearance in the east and the year fol lowing they will devote almost exclusively to the south and far west and so in two tours of forty weeks each cover the entire country their final leave tajslng will occur at manhattan opera house new york ln june 11114 miss marlowe explained to-day that she had been actively engaged as an actress since she was twelve years old that her husband mr sothern had also been on the stage since he was a youth and that both had come to the conclusion that they were entitled to say good-by to the profes sion to which they had given so many years of toil mr sothern and miss marlowe joined forces nearly eight years ago so ex traordinary bns been their artistic and financial success as shakespearean stars they have come to be considered the chief dramatic institution of the american stage ohio to vote on suffrage convention passes clause to submit measure to people columbus 0 may 28 the voters of this state will be confronted with the ques tion of whether women will be allowed to vote in ohio this being brought about by the action of the ohio constitutional con vention which to-day passed the woman suffrage clause by a vote of 74 to 37 after the friends of the measure had se cured its passage the yfurther clinched their hold after reconsideration the char ter-makers have no other alternative but to submit the measure as adopted how it will e submitted however has not yet been decided whether or not it will be placed on a separate ballot from the other constitution amendments has not been de cided and it is up to the charter-makers to do so wright rallies slightly dayton 0 may b again rallying from a condition of extreme physical col lapse wilbur wright to-night grew stronger within the hour physicians allot ted him to die and at the expiration or the period he made apparently substan tial improvement early this evening his physicians bulle tined that the eud probably would occur within a nhour if the wonderful vitality the patient has exhibited thus far contin ues he has a chance but all indications are that he cannot survive the night birth decrease startles 1 steelal c-hle to tha examiner paris may 28 the report issued to day by the national bureau of vital sta tistics created a sensation it shows that during 1911 there were 3,Â«u9 less births than deaths in france this is the most unfavornwe showing in the history of france end-of-the-month sales are important events in every store by j r hamilton these are the days when every merchant puts his house in order for the coming month putting his house in order is a costly process for him and a valuable opportunity for you for the law of stores is that the stream of merchandise must be kept flowing pure and sweet and clean from bank to bank the most dangerous thing with which any store has to contend is the piling up of odd lots and broken lines therefore the wise merchant will sell these accumula tions at any cost that is where the value of these end-of tke-monlh sales comes in for you if your eyes are quick you can do a great deal of buying with a very small expenditure every woman or some representative of every family should be in the stores during the last few days of each month to take advantage of these natural clearances it doesn't make any difference to you whether a mer chant has six or sixty or six hundred pairs still left of a certain brand of shoes but it makes all the difference in the world to him all you want to know is will any of the pairs that he is trying to clear out fit you you are not concerned whether a furniture or rug or house needs dealer has one or a hundred pieces of a certain stock so long as you can get the thing you want for less than you ought to pay every merchant in every line has got to clear out his broken stocks or his place would soon look like an old curios ity shop this is the one bad uneconomic feature of store-keep ing which no one has fully overcome and the sooner you the public learn to take full advantage of these forced sales the richer you will be nearly every store in america is offering these end-of the-montk inducements right now ' whether they say it in so many words or not the fact remains that they have these odd lots and they have to sell them if you will watch the advertising pages of this paper for the next few days if you will study them as a man would study a stock report and know what you are going after you will be amazed at the bargains you can secure and at the remarkable purchases you will be able to make every store should be busier at the enff of this month than it was at the beginning turn to the advertising columns now read the hundreds of values that are being offered there and you will quickly see the reason why guantanamo saved by 1,000 u.s marines men landed from transport prairie as rebels menace naval station 10,000 rebels in field battleships due at key west thursday 100,000,000 of american capital in peril washington may 28 ten tho-sauj ncgroes 3,000 of them under arms are swarming over the eastern end of cuba tearing up railroads burning plantations and threatening to massacre the white in habitants the alarming spread and menacing char acter of the insurrection which is now a war of races is described in dispatches received by the state department to night only the timely arrival of the transport prairie bearing 1.000 marines saved the united states naval station at guantana mo from capture and destruction by uie rebels against this force of 10,000 negroes now freed from restraint and threatening war against the united states is an untrained and timid cuban force of 4,000 ill-armed men whose inactivity is the source of bitter criticism by the department of state to land 2,400 marines it is the intention of the united states to establish a camp of 2,400 marines at guantanamo and to operate against the insurrection in guantanamo province from there so aggravated and alarmed is the united states over the situation in cuba that one of the highest officials in the navy in formed the Chicago examiner representa tive to-night tbat it is the purpose of this country to establish a great camp at guantanamo and maintain it for all time the rebels have loreir.ly collected ? 1,000 from the managers of the san miguel sugar r ills and stole 5,000 from a spanish com pany at el caney and burned 80,000 worth of sugar cane on the property sur rounding the esperanza mill also owned by fc-padish citizens the navy department to-night issued what might truthfully be termed its first war bulletin in it they describe the move ment and great speed of sixteen ships now hurrying to the scene of action nashville at nipe bay the battleships georgia new jersey and rhode island which left hampton koads on sunday are due at key west accord ing to the bulletin at 6 o'clock on thurs day morning the flagship washington is due about noon die same day nnd the bat tleships minnesota mississippi missouri and ohio at 3 o'clock the gunboat nashville arrived at nipe bay on the northeast coast of cnba where the insurrectos are pfrtictlarly active to night at noon to-day the collier mars hurried out of hampton roads for key west and mill be followed by the supply ship cril goa to-morrow the collier caesar is now loading and will get away on friday the cyclops will go on june 4 the department of state estimates the amount of american capital in peril in the eastern district of cuba at more than 100,000,000 10,000 tons of sugar burned special cable to the examiner havana may 28 the day pasi-ed with out any advices of a clash between the negroes in the province of oriente and the regular troops which left havana last night under command of general montea gudo although news was received of one or two clashes between the insurgents and the rural guards in the disturbed province a body of rebels burned between 8,000 and 10.000 tons of sugar cane on the plan tation of marco sanchez near uuanta namo together with a string of cars and a set of heavy scales a party of newspaper men who visited the rebel generals estenoz and yvonet say the leaders claim that the government of fered them 840,000 each if they would come in with their forces this is emphat ically denied to-night by government offi cials in havana general estenoz denies that the present trouble is a race war between the whites and blacks he says he desires the in tervention of the united states or a re peal of the morua law this law denies equal right to the negro and the while man the rebels to-day captured the railroad stations at itaniou de las saguas and at verba guinea both near bongo at the former they captured seven rurales and a quantity of arms and ammunition seized as he kisses girl spooning over the long distance tele phone with miss mary devine of milwau kee yesterday led to the arrest of alfred c ryan an alleged burglar ryan was ar rested at the union passenger station after he had greeted the young woman with a kiss as she stepped from a train ry-on is alleged to have stolen jewelry valued at 3,500 in milwaukee no trace of him was obtained until monday when through a crossed wire with one of the milwaukee police stations he was heard talking to j miss devine he asked her to meet him i in the unfon passenger station last evening lauds summer camp idea wins mrs young boys greatest need ella flagg young calls b0y # city project best form of educative philanthropy a boy who makes a good boy ctcfeer probably will make a good man citizen mrs ella flagg young superin tendent of schools boy city is putting into practice the fun damental principle we are gradually adopting in our public schools in Chicago â€” the principle of self-disci pline * * * we are gradually ap proaching a point where we are making theoretical education an appendage to its practical application * * * boy city allows a boy to use his own powers to re strain himself from bad impulses and to build up his good impulses the examiner's offer to send the boys of Chicago to boy city for a free vaca tion of two weeks is the best form of educative philanthropy it is not charity for it helps the boy to help himself and is along the line of the boy's de velopment v * * self-discipline and re straint is the plan of the future in dealing with both boys and girls ella flagg young superintendent of Chicago schools enthusiastically praises offer made by examiner by i_rs ella flagg young superintendent of Chicago public schools goy city is putting into practice the fundamental principle wnich we are gradually adopting in our public schools in Chicago â€” the prin ciple of self-discipline that is to develop the impulses of the boy and girl along proper lines instead of making the practical part of his education sub jective to his literary education i practical application a sort of ap course now we are gradually ap the literary statement â€” the theory f education an appendage to its practical ppllcation 3oy develops himself it is because boy city gives the boy imself a chance to bring out and de elop what is in him that it has my ap roval you say bring out what la good 1 the boy i merely say to give the boy chance to develop his own impulses tany people would take that to mean that le boy is to be left to follow his own ent good or bad to guide himself just s he pleases along any path that suits bis aney that is not the fact he is allowed 3 use his own power to restrain himself rom bad impulses and his own power 3 build up his own good impulses the undamental power to do this rests with he boy if he shows a tendency to go so far in a direction that is no good â€” hat is not playing square he soon finds ut that he has taken the wrong track nd corrects that impulse eaves boy to own judgment the point is that the boy merely needs o be shown and left to his sense of fair ess to develop he knows he must be guare if he goes to boy city he knows aat every boy around him has gone there rith the same knowledge and that laws aat make for squareness are going to be assed by his fellow boy citizens tbat is why boy city is such a good chool for the boy it develops his sense f squareness of honesty to himself and thers that is the slogan of every boy ho goes there it is a fine course in self iscipline for any boy the examiner's offer to send boys on free vacation of two weeks to boy city ear valparaiso is the best type of edu ative philanthropy i do not say lt is hilanthropy there is a difference be ween philanthropy and educative philan hropy philanthropy not charity the examiner's offer comes under tho itter classification it is the sort of hilanthropy which is not charity it helps he boy to help himself he earns his va ation and goes to boy city as an inde eleanor sears to form society gi is polo team male garb and riding astride to be features of games of new boston club boston may 28 â€” miss eleanor sears has come to the fore with another novel tyâ€”the formation of a polo team of bos ton and brookly society girls who will ride astride and wear the same costumes as the male players miss sears aims to contest honors with the pioneer women's polo team the mea dow lark club of long island which is led by mrs thomas hitchcock the lat ter team plaus to play yale the players who are prominent new york society women wear riding trousers and mannish helmets i hope to get a team together before the season is far advanced said miss to-day i play polo and find it jolly good fun lots of other boston girls play polo in secret it is not hard for a woman to play polo riding astride the meadow lark team is playing almost as fast a game as the men would you wear divided skirts miss sears was asked i should say not it would be as much as your life was worth to wear skirts in a polo game we will wear the conven tional polo costume of course mouse breaks up matinee joljet 111 may 28 just as the he roine at the opera house matinee here to day was about to escape from the clutches of the villain she spied a mouse on the other end of the stage she became par alyzed with fright and was unable to move five hundred women who attended the performance on seeing the cause of the interruption of the drama stampeded for the doors in the rush mrs a blake was hurt the mouse got away detlstere in prtcf onf cfnt delivered bv caller u s patent office l_Â»rnt t___ln 1 s , - en(j pe ' r mm|b _ roosevelt wins new jersey claiming 18 to 10 Taft delegates progressive league claims 14 of the district delegates and the four at large to be instructed for colonel i wilson may lose six votes in own state i i essex county appears to have ! voted against professor which may cost him the ballots of three districts Taft campaigns till 5 minutes to poll time new york may 28 returns from the new jersey primaries received up to midnight make it almost certain that theodore roosevelt has carried the state and th|p question at that hour was how much mr Taft would save out of the wreck governor woodrow wilson also carried the state against the faction in favor of uninstructed delegates to baltimore the only dent apparent in the wilson strength was in essex county the home of smith and nu j gent where the opposition was well ! handled the ninth tenth and pos , sibly the eighth district may have been lost to wilson the delegation j to the national convention under the unit r_l9 will be his ' ftoosevelt claims 1 8 of 28 a i 11:30 o'clock the republican progres sive league which had charge of the roosevelt campaign claimed eighteen out of the twenty-eight delegates this claim included fourteen district delegates and the four delegates at large at the same hour e w gray secretary of the Taft business men's league of new ark telephoned to the Taft national bureau in washington that Taft had carried new ark which embraced the better part of three congressional districts the eighth ninth and tenth by a safe majority the returns as they came in did not indicate this and what information mr gray had for basis of his claim is not known the roosevelt men claimed a 2 to 1 victory hackensack votes for Taft in the early returns one of the first towns to report was hackensack in ber gen county where president Taft spoke tuesday here Taft received sso votes and roosevelt 350 it appeared from the returns there and nearby points that Taft had carried the county and perhaps the congressional district the sixth ln which are the counties of warren hunterton sussex bergen and a small part of pas saic this vote for the president was an upset on the predictions made during the day then it wa3 granted that t&ft would make a fair showing and that he would carry the second fifth and seventh districts in fact these districts which contain the counties of atlantic cape may cum berland and burlington ln the second dis trict morris and union in the fifth and passaic in the seventh were practically conceded to Taft Taft fights to the last camden n j may sb president Taft continued his fight for the new jersey delegates up to within five minutes of the opening of the polls there it was 12:55 o'clock this afternoon when the president finished his last speech at glasboro the polls opened at 1 o'clock the last day of the campaign was marked by a declaration from the presi dent that within the present generation women will have the right to vote roosevelt claims 429 after jersey victory j^ew york may 28 < vi roosevelt adherents \ to-night are claiming 429 s certain votes in the national i convention as a result of | the primary in new jersey j to-day followers of the â– > former president were { claiming eighteen of new j jersey's delegates to-night Taft followers on the i other hand will not con j cede roosevelt more than j 409 they maintain that i the president has more i than the 540 votes needed ) to nominate him at Chicago roosevelt aims at revenge on Taft aldrich and cannon alfred henry lewis tells of rhode island man's boast when Taft took office how it angered colonel stories in washington to the effect roosevelt has been offered panama chiefship or chance to take mexico â€” by alfred henry lewis washington d c may 28 â€” as showing what in the way of the feverish and fantastic is ripe in these parts here is what grave publicists say to one another when unbuckled and released from the graver cares of state they tell â€” in awed whispers gen erallyâ€”that Taft to be rid of roose velt the ruthless has had it sub mitted to that gentleman tentatively of course that he roosevelt might if he pleased be the unchecked un curbed head of the big canal he might pull on hip-high boots stand around on some lonely peak in darien like keats cortez and boss things he should be monarch in a canal sense of all he surveyed until the canal was completed and then go to san francisco as the big scream of the exposition or he could conquer mexico or preferring blood to mud war to work on the canal if roosevelt pleased he might be head of the army it was intimated that affairs possessed a squally look on the thither side of the rio grande and it was by no means sure that occasion would not arise which would send 200,000 of our troops into mexico to protect the flag and uphold the american dollar roosevelt might lead the gallant dash into the former home camp of the lm:ontezumas if his heart so moved Taft would exert the utmost power of his white house to produce either the canal or the military situation de scribed roosevelt has but to lift ac cepting finger and say which these dazzling offers â€” so wags the tongue of rumor â€” traveled from one to another of a dozen men before after leaving Taft they reached roosevelt nothing was said about roosevelt's abandoning his violent pursuit of the presidency nothing as to his consenting to taft's renomina tion these things however were continued on 2d page 2d column contnsued on sth page 6th column i circulation books open to all largest morning circulation gj^g*sia_r Chicago and vicinity cioudy ram^^j3nt_~j a ' nd unsettled wednesday thursday tfl/|\\'^kej||k^j fair moderately cool brisk westerly jjsms winds range of temperatures yesterday f mghest 81 m rjl Â»â– â– lowest 61 ee-jfc average 71 free free to every reader of the sunday examiner 4 round trip tickets a on steamers t theodore roosevelt and united states good for afternoon and evening cruises during july cut out the coupon in next sunday's examiner order your paper in advance > tha circulation ot this publication the figures ot eircul-tioo contained ia tfaa association's report e nvr are guaranteed attoeiation of amfriemn advertiser no 23tt whitehall bldg n y cfry

Chicago examiner wednesday wednesday v Chicago may 29 1912 16 pages vol x no 137 a m rockefeller on stand in oil case loses memory adroitly avoids direct replies to unt.rmyer and admits only same group still di rects policies of standard richest man in world brown and freckled and in pink neglige shirt pounds table never read trust decision hew tork may 28 john d rocke feller was subjected to a gruelling exam ination to-day by samuel l'ntermyer in the proceedings instituted ln missouri by the waters-pierce oil company to prevent that former subsidiary of the standard oil trnst from falling again into the con trol of the rockefeller interests the examination was conducted before special commissioner a l jacobs ap pointed by the missouri court to take tes imony in the legal resistance h clay pierce president of the waters-pierce company is making against the continued domination of the company by the masters of the old oil trust which is supposed to have been dissolved by the decree of the united states supreme court low witness was attired for two hours mr rockefeller was ln the witness chair brown as a nut and freckled as a turkey egg the world's rich est man stood the ordeal without apparent fatigue pain or embarrassment he was attired in a natty gray tweed suit the frock coat of which was cut ln the latest ashlon he wore a negligee madras shirt jf a delicate pink tint and with detachable cuffs that frequently caught the sleeves f his coat and protruded their upper edges a white silk four-in-hand tie nold njr a brilliant emerald stickpin completed ms attire mr rockefeller proved a hand task for the adroit and skillful mr untermyer the lawyer could have finished with the witness in a few minutes bad mr rocke feller not artfully and persistently avoided giving direct answers to simple questions at the conclusion of the examination mr untermyer declared that he had flnal j achieved what he bad started out to do this was the obtaining of the admission from mr rockefeller tbat a group of gentlemen are still directing the policies of standard oil from the same old stand at 26 broadway mr rockefeller's persons counsel george sothern and marlowe to retire from stage in 1 9 1 4 shakespearean stars announce they will close careers after two more seasons cleveland 0 may 28 e h sothern and julia marlowe announced to-duy that after two more seasons they will retire permanently from the stage for some time it has been their purpose to set a final limit to their dramatic activities next season they will make their final appearance in the east and the year fol lowing they will devote almost exclusively to the south and far west and so in two tours of forty weeks each cover the entire country their final leave tajslng will occur at manhattan opera house new york ln june 11114 miss marlowe explained to-day that she had been actively engaged as an actress since she was twelve years old that her husband mr sothern had also been on the stage since he was a youth and that both had come to the conclusion that they were entitled to say good-by to the profes sion to which they had given so many years of toil mr sothern and miss marlowe joined forces nearly eight years ago so ex traordinary bns been their artistic and financial success as shakespearean stars they have come to be considered the chief dramatic institution of the american stage ohio to vote on suffrage convention passes clause to submit measure to people columbus 0 may 28 the voters of this state will be confronted with the ques tion of whether women will be allowed to vote in ohio this being brought about by the action of the ohio constitutional con vention which to-day passed the woman suffrage clause by a vote of 74 to 37 after the friends of the measure had se cured its passage the yfurther clinched their hold after reconsideration the char ter-makers have no other alternative but to submit the measure as adopted how it will e submitted however has not yet been decided whether or not it will be placed on a separate ballot from the other constitution amendments has not been de cided and it is up to the charter-makers to do so wright rallies slightly dayton 0 may b again rallying from a condition of extreme physical col lapse wilbur wright to-night grew stronger within the hour physicians allot ted him to die and at the expiration or the period he made apparently substan tial improvement early this evening his physicians bulle tined that the eud probably would occur within a nhour if the wonderful vitality the patient has exhibited thus far contin ues he has a chance but all indications are that he cannot survive the night birth decrease startles 1 steelal c-hle to tha examiner paris may 28 the report issued to day by the national bureau of vital sta tistics created a sensation it shows that during 1911 there were 3,Â«u9 less births than deaths in france this is the most unfavornwe showing in the history of france end-of-the-month sales are important events in every store by j r hamilton these are the days when every merchant puts his house in order for the coming month putting his house in order is a costly process for him and a valuable opportunity for you for the law of stores is that the stream of merchandise must be kept flowing pure and sweet and clean from bank to bank the most dangerous thing with which any store has to contend is the piling up of odd lots and broken lines therefore the wise merchant will sell these accumula tions at any cost that is where the value of these end-of tke-monlh sales comes in for you if your eyes are quick you can do a great deal of buying with a very small expenditure every woman or some representative of every family should be in the stores during the last few days of each month to take advantage of these natural clearances it doesn't make any difference to you whether a mer chant has six or sixty or six hundred pairs still left of a certain brand of shoes but it makes all the difference in the world to him all you want to know is will any of the pairs that he is trying to clear out fit you you are not concerned whether a furniture or rug or house needs dealer has one or a hundred pieces of a certain stock so long as you can get the thing you want for less than you ought to pay every merchant in every line has got to clear out his broken stocks or his place would soon look like an old curios ity shop this is the one bad uneconomic feature of store-keep ing which no one has fully overcome and the sooner you the public learn to take full advantage of these forced sales the richer you will be nearly every store in america is offering these end-of the-montk inducements right now ' whether they say it in so many words or not the fact remains that they have these odd lots and they have to sell them if you will watch the advertising pages of this paper for the next few days if you will study them as a man would study a stock report and know what you are going after you will be amazed at the bargains you can secure and at the remarkable purchases you will be able to make every store should be busier at the enff of this month than it was at the beginning turn to the advertising columns now read the hundreds of values that are being offered there and you will quickly see the reason why guantanamo saved by 1,000 u.s marines men landed from transport prairie as rebels menace naval station 10,000 rebels in field battleships due at key west thursday 100,000,000 of american capital in peril washington may 28 ten tho-sauj ncgroes 3,000 of them under arms are swarming over the eastern end of cuba tearing up railroads burning plantations and threatening to massacre the white in habitants the alarming spread and menacing char acter of the insurrection which is now a war of races is described in dispatches received by the state department to night only the timely arrival of the transport prairie bearing 1.000 marines saved the united states naval station at guantana mo from capture and destruction by uie rebels against this force of 10,000 negroes now freed from restraint and threatening war against the united states is an untrained and timid cuban force of 4,000 ill-armed men whose inactivity is the source of bitter criticism by the department of state to land 2,400 marines it is the intention of the united states to establish a camp of 2,400 marines at guantanamo and to operate against the insurrection in guantanamo province from there so aggravated and alarmed is the united states over the situation in cuba that one of the highest officials in the navy in formed the Chicago examiner representa tive to-night tbat it is the purpose of this country to establish a great camp at guantanamo and maintain it for all time the rebels have loreir.ly collected ? 1,000 from the managers of the san miguel sugar r ills and stole 5,000 from a spanish com pany at el caney and burned 80,000 worth of sugar cane on the property sur rounding the esperanza mill also owned by fc-padish citizens the navy department to-night issued what might truthfully be termed its first war bulletin in it they describe the move ment and great speed of sixteen ships now hurrying to the scene of action nashville at nipe bay the battleships georgia new jersey and rhode island which left hampton koads on sunday are due at key west accord ing to the bulletin at 6 o'clock on thurs day morning the flagship washington is due about noon die same day nnd the bat tleships minnesota mississippi missouri and ohio at 3 o'clock the gunboat nashville arrived at nipe bay on the northeast coast of cnba where the insurrectos are pfrtictlarly active to night at noon to-day the collier mars hurried out of hampton roads for key west and mill be followed by the supply ship cril goa to-morrow the collier caesar is now loading and will get away on friday the cyclops will go on june 4 the department of state estimates the amount of american capital in peril in the eastern district of cuba at more than 100,000,000 10,000 tons of sugar burned special cable to the examiner havana may 28 the day pasi-ed with out any advices of a clash between the negroes in the province of oriente and the regular troops which left havana last night under command of general montea gudo although news was received of one or two clashes between the insurgents and the rural guards in the disturbed province a body of rebels burned between 8,000 and 10.000 tons of sugar cane on the plan tation of marco sanchez near uuanta namo together with a string of cars and a set of heavy scales a party of newspaper men who visited the rebel generals estenoz and yvonet say the leaders claim that the government of fered them 840,000 each if they would come in with their forces this is emphat ically denied to-night by government offi cials in havana general estenoz denies that the present trouble is a race war between the whites and blacks he says he desires the in tervention of the united states or a re peal of the morua law this law denies equal right to the negro and the while man the rebels to-day captured the railroad stations at itaniou de las saguas and at verba guinea both near bongo at the former they captured seven rurales and a quantity of arms and ammunition seized as he kisses girl spooning over the long distance tele phone with miss mary devine of milwau kee yesterday led to the arrest of alfred c ryan an alleged burglar ryan was ar rested at the union passenger station after he had greeted the young woman with a kiss as she stepped from a train ry-on is alleged to have stolen jewelry valued at 3,500 in milwaukee no trace of him was obtained until monday when through a crossed wire with one of the milwaukee police stations he was heard talking to j miss devine he asked her to meet him i in the unfon passenger station last evening lauds summer camp idea wins mrs young boys greatest need ella flagg young calls b0y # city project best form of educative philanthropy a boy who makes a good boy ctcfeer probably will make a good man citizen mrs ella flagg young superin tendent of schools boy city is putting into practice the fun damental principle we are gradually adopting in our public schools in Chicago â€” the principle of self-disci pline * * * we are gradually ap proaching a point where we are making theoretical education an appendage to its practical application * * * boy city allows a boy to use his own powers to re strain himself from bad impulses and to build up his good impulses the examiner's offer to send the boys of Chicago to boy city for a free vaca tion of two weeks is the best form of educative philanthropy it is not charity for it helps the boy to help himself and is along the line of the boy's de velopment v * * self-discipline and re straint is the plan of the future in dealing with both boys and girls ella flagg young superintendent of Chicago schools enthusiastically praises offer made by examiner by i_rs ella flagg young superintendent of Chicago public schools goy city is putting into practice the fundamental principle wnich we are gradually adopting in our public schools in Chicago â€” the prin ciple of self-discipline that is to develop the impulses of the boy and girl along proper lines instead of making the practical part of his education sub jective to his literary education i practical application a sort of ap course now we are gradually ap the literary statement â€” the theory f education an appendage to its practical ppllcation 3oy develops himself it is because boy city gives the boy imself a chance to bring out and de elop what is in him that it has my ap roval you say bring out what la good 1 the boy i merely say to give the boy chance to develop his own impulses tany people would take that to mean that le boy is to be left to follow his own ent good or bad to guide himself just s he pleases along any path that suits bis aney that is not the fact he is allowed 3 use his own power to restrain himself rom bad impulses and his own power 3 build up his own good impulses the undamental power to do this rests with he boy if he shows a tendency to go so far in a direction that is no good â€” hat is not playing square he soon finds ut that he has taken the wrong track nd corrects that impulse eaves boy to own judgment the point is that the boy merely needs o be shown and left to his sense of fair ess to develop he knows he must be guare if he goes to boy city he knows aat every boy around him has gone there rith the same knowledge and that laws aat make for squareness are going to be assed by his fellow boy citizens tbat is why boy city is such a good chool for the boy it develops his sense f squareness of honesty to himself and thers that is the slogan of every boy ho goes there it is a fine course in self iscipline for any boy the examiner's offer to send boys on free vacation of two weeks to boy city ear valparaiso is the best type of edu ative philanthropy i do not say lt is hilanthropy there is a difference be ween philanthropy and educative philan hropy philanthropy not charity the examiner's offer comes under tho itter classification it is the sort of hilanthropy which is not charity it helps he boy to help himself he earns his va ation and goes to boy city as an inde eleanor sears to form society gi is polo team male garb and riding astride to be features of games of new boston club boston may 28 â€” miss eleanor sears has come to the fore with another novel tyâ€”the formation of a polo team of bos ton and brookly society girls who will ride astride and wear the same costumes as the male players miss sears aims to contest honors with the pioneer women's polo team the mea dow lark club of long island which is led by mrs thomas hitchcock the lat ter team plaus to play yale the players who are prominent new york society women wear riding trousers and mannish helmets i hope to get a team together before the season is far advanced said miss to-day i play polo and find it jolly good fun lots of other boston girls play polo in secret it is not hard for a woman to play polo riding astride the meadow lark team is playing almost as fast a game as the men would you wear divided skirts miss sears was asked i should say not it would be as much as your life was worth to wear skirts in a polo game we will wear the conven tional polo costume of course mouse breaks up matinee joljet 111 may 28 just as the he roine at the opera house matinee here to day was about to escape from the clutches of the villain she spied a mouse on the other end of the stage she became par alyzed with fright and was unable to move five hundred women who attended the performance on seeing the cause of the interruption of the drama stampeded for the doors in the rush mrs a blake was hurt the mouse got away detlstere in prtcf onf cfnt delivered bv caller u s patent office l_Â»rnt t___ln 1 s , - en(j pe ' r mm|b _ roosevelt wins new jersey claiming 18 to 10 Taft delegates progressive league claims 14 of the district delegates and the four at large to be instructed for colonel i wilson may lose six votes in own state i i essex county appears to have ! voted against professor which may cost him the ballots of three districts Taft campaigns till 5 minutes to poll time new york may 28 returns from the new jersey primaries received up to midnight make it almost certain that theodore roosevelt has carried the state and th|p question at that hour was how much mr Taft would save out of the wreck governor woodrow wilson also carried the state against the faction in favor of uninstructed delegates to baltimore the only dent apparent in the wilson strength was in essex county the home of smith and nu j gent where the opposition was well ! handled the ninth tenth and pos , sibly the eighth district may have been lost to wilson the delegation j to the national convention under the unit r_l9 will be his ' ftoosevelt claims 1 8 of 28 a i 11:30 o'clock the republican progres sive league which had charge of the roosevelt campaign claimed eighteen out of the twenty-eight delegates this claim included fourteen district delegates and the four delegates at large at the same hour e w gray secretary of the Taft business men's league of new ark telephoned to the Taft national bureau in washington that Taft had carried new ark which embraced the better part of three congressional districts the eighth ninth and tenth by a safe majority the returns as they came in did not indicate this and what information mr gray had for basis of his claim is not known the roosevelt men claimed a 2 to 1 victory hackensack votes for Taft in the early returns one of the first towns to report was hackensack in ber gen county where president Taft spoke tuesday here Taft received sso votes and roosevelt 350 it appeared from the returns there and nearby points that Taft had carried the county and perhaps the congressional district the sixth ln which are the counties of warren hunterton sussex bergen and a small part of pas saic this vote for the president was an upset on the predictions made during the day then it wa3 granted that t&ft would make a fair showing and that he would carry the second fifth and seventh districts in fact these districts which contain the counties of atlantic cape may cum berland and burlington ln the second dis trict morris and union in the fifth and passaic in the seventh were practically conceded to Taft Taft fights to the last camden n j may sb president Taft continued his fight for the new jersey delegates up to within five minutes of the opening of the polls there it was 12:55 o'clock this afternoon when the president finished his last speech at glasboro the polls opened at 1 o'clock the last day of the campaign was marked by a declaration from the presi dent that within the present generation women will have the right to vote roosevelt claims 429 after jersey victory j^ew york may 28 < vi roosevelt adherents \ to-night are claiming 429 s certain votes in the national i convention as a result of | the primary in new jersey j to-day followers of the â– > former president were { claiming eighteen of new j jersey's delegates to-night Taft followers on the i other hand will not con j cede roosevelt more than j 409 they maintain that i the president has more i than the 540 votes needed ) to nominate him at Chicago roosevelt aims at revenge on Taft aldrich and cannon alfred henry lewis tells of rhode island man's boast when Taft took office how it angered colonel stories in washington to the effect roosevelt has been offered panama chiefship or chance to take mexico â€” by alfred henry lewis washington d c may 28 â€” as showing what in the way of the feverish and fantastic is ripe in these parts here is what grave publicists say to one another when unbuckled and released from the graver cares of state they tell â€” in awed whispers gen erallyâ€”that Taft to be rid of roose velt the ruthless has had it sub mitted to that gentleman tentatively of course that he roosevelt might if he pleased be the unchecked un curbed head of the big canal he might pull on hip-high boots stand around on some lonely peak in darien like keats cortez and boss things he should be monarch in a canal sense of all he surveyed until the canal was completed and then go to san francisco as the big scream of the exposition or he could conquer mexico or preferring blood to mud war to work on the canal if roosevelt pleased he might be head of the army it was intimated that affairs possessed a squally look on the thither side of the rio grande and it was by no means sure that occasion would not arise which would send 200,000 of our troops into mexico to protect the flag and uphold the american dollar roosevelt might lead the gallant dash into the former home camp of the lm:ontezumas if his heart so moved Taft would exert the utmost power of his white house to produce either the canal or the military situation de scribed roosevelt has but to lift ac cepting finger and say which these dazzling offers â€” so wags the tongue of rumor â€” traveled from one to another of a dozen men before after leaving Taft they reached roosevelt nothing was said about roosevelt's abandoning his violent pursuit of the presidency nothing as to his consenting to taft's renomina tion these things however were continued on 2d page 2d column contnsued on sth page 6th column i circulation books open to all largest morning circulation gj^g*sia_r Chicago and vicinity cioudy ram^^j3nt_~j a ' nd unsettled wednesday thursday tfl/|\\'^kej||k^j fair moderately cool brisk westerly jjsms winds range of temperatures yesterday f mghest 81 m rjl Â»â– â– lowest 61 ee-jfc average 71 free free to every reader of the sunday examiner 4 round trip tickets a on steamers t theodore roosevelt and united states good for afternoon and evening cruises during july cut out the coupon in next sunday's examiner order your paper in advance > tha circulation ot this publication the figures ot eircul-tioo contained ia tfaa association's report e nvr are guaranteed attoeiation of amfriemn advertiser no 23tt whitehall bldg n y cfry